세계 역사학자 187명 아베 반성 촉구 성명서

2015-05-07 12:23

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세계적인 유명 역사학자 187명이 6일(현지시각) 아베 신조 일본 총리를 향해 역사적 사실

세계적인 유명 역사학자 187명이 6일(현지시각) 아베 신조 일본 총리를 향해 역사적 사실을 왜곡하지 말고 인정하라는 내용의 집단 성명을 발표했다.

성명에서 역사학자들은 일본군 위안부는 전시 성폭력 중에서 가장 두드러진 사건이었다며 각종 증거를 통해 이미 사실임이 증명됐다고 밝혔다.

학자들은 일본군 위안부 동원에 강제성이 없었다는 주장에 대해 “수많은 여성들이 자신의 의지에 반해 붙잡히고 끔찍한 야만 행위를 겪었다는 증거는 분명하다”며 “역사학자들은 일본군이 여성들의 이송과 위안소 관리에 관여했음을 증명하는 수많은 자료들을 발굴했다”고 전했다.

이어 “중요한 증거는 피해자들의 증언에 있다”며 “비록 피해자들의 이야기가 다양하고 일관성 없는 기억에 의존하고 있더라도 피해자들이 제공하는 총체적인 기록은 설득력이 있고 병사 또는 다른 이들의 증언과 함께 공식 문서에 의해서도 뒷받침된다”고 강조했다. 학자들은 일본군 위안부 피해자들의 숫자가 과장됐다는 주장에 대해서도 “숫자가 수만명이건 수십만명이건 일본 제국과 일제의 전쟁터에서 착취가 벌어졌다는 사실은 바뀌지 않는다”고 단언했다.

또 아베 총리가 미 의회 합동 연설에서 인권과 전쟁의 고통에 대해 언급했지만 더욱 적극적으로 행동해야 한다고 말했다.

학자들은 이에 따라 “아베 총리는 미국 의회 합동 연설에서 보편적 가치인 인권과 인간안보의 중요성 및 일본이 다른 나라에 가했던 고통에 직면하는 문제를 언급했는데 이같은 정서에 칭찬을 보내며 아베 총리가 이 모두에서 과감하게 행동할 것을 촉구한다”고 밝혔다.

성명에는 에즈라 보겔, 앤드루 고든 하버드대 교수, 브루스 커밍스 시카고대 교수 등 권위 있는 동아시아·일본 전문가들이 대거 참여했다.

성명을 주도한 알렉시스 더든 코네티컷대 교수는 ‘일본내 사학자들을 지지하는 성명’이라는 제목의 영어·일본어 성명서를 일본 총리실에 전달했다고 밝혔다.

OPEN LETTER IN SUPPORT OF HISTORIANS IN JAPAN

The undersigned scholars of Japanese studies express our unity with the many

courageous historians in Japan seeking an accurate and just history of World War II in

Asia. Because Japan is a second home as well as a field of research for many of us, we

write with a shared concern for the way that the history of Japan and East Asia is studied

and commemorated.

In this important commemorative year, we also write to celebrate seventy years of peace

between Japan and its neighbors. Postwar Japan’s history of democracy, civilian control

of the military, police restraint, and political tolerance, together with contributions to

science and generous aid to other countries, are all things to celebrate as well.

Yet problems of historical interpretation pose an impediment to celebrating these

achievements. One of the most divisive historical issues is the so-called “comfort women”

system. This issue has become so distorted by nationalist invective in Japan as well as in

Korea and China that many scholars, along with journalists and politicians, have lost

sight of the fundamental goal of historical inquiry, which should be to understand the

human condition and aspire to improve it.

Exploitation of the suffering of former “comfort women” for nationalist ends in the

countries of the victims makes an international resolution more difficult and further

insults the dignity of the women themselves. Yet denying or trivializing what happened

to them is equally unacceptable. Among the many instances of wartime sexual violence

and military prostitution in the twentieth century, the “comfort women” system was

distinguished by its large scale and systematic management under the military, and by its

exploitation of young, poor, and vulnerable women in areas colonized or occupied by

Japan.

There is no easy path to a “correct history.” Much of the archive of the Japanese imperial

military was destroyed. The actions of local procurers who provided women to the

military may never have been recorded. But historians have unearthed numerous

documents demonstrating the military’s involvement in the transfer of women and

oversight of brothels. Important evidence also comes from the testimony of victims.

Although their stories are diverse and affected by the inconsistencies of memory, the

aggregate record they offer is compelling and supported by official documents as well as

by the accounts of soldiers and others.

Historians disagree over the precise number of “comfort women,” which will probably

never be known for certain. Establishing sound estimates of victims is important. But

ultimately, whether the numbers are judged to have been in the tens of thousands or the

hundreds of thousands will not alter the fact of the exploitation carried out throughout the

Japanese empire and its war zones.

Some historians also dispute how directly the Japanese military was involved, and

whether women were coerced to become “comfort women.” Yet the evidence makes clear that large numbers of women were held against their will and subjected to horrific

brutality. Employing legalistic arguments focused on particular terms or isolated

documents to challenge the victims’ testimony both misses the fundamental issue of their

brutalization and ignores the larger context of the inhumane system that exploited them.

Like our colleagues in Japan, we believe that only careful weighing and contextual

evaluation of every trace of the past can produce a just history. Such work must resist

national and gender bias, and be free from government manipulation, censorship, and

private intimidation. We defend the freedom of historical inquiry, and we call upon all

governments to do the same.

Many countries still struggle to acknowledge past injustices. It took over forty years for

the United States government to compensate Japanese-Americans for their internment

during World War II. The promise of equality for African Americans was not realized in

US law until a century after the abolition of slavery, and the reality of racism remains

ingrained in American society. None of the imperial powers of the nineteenth and

twentieth centuries, including the United States, the European nations, and Japan, can

claim to have sufficiently reckoned with their histories of racism, colonialism, and war,

or with the suffering they inflicted on countless civilians around the world.

Japan today values the life and rights of every individual, including the most vulnerable.

The Japanese government would not tolerate the exploitation of women in a system like

the military “comfort stations” now, either overseas or at home. Even at the time, some

officials protested on moral grounds. But the wartime regime compelled absolute

sacrifice of the individual to serve the state, causing great suffering to the Japanese

people themselves as well as to other Asians. No one should have to suffer such

conditions again.

This year presents an opportunity for the government of Japan to show leadership by

addressing Japan’s history of colonial rule and wartime aggression in both words and

action. In his April address to the US Congress, Prime Minister Abe spoke of the

universal value of human rights, of the importance of human security, and of facing the

suffering that Japan caused other countries. We applaud these sentiments and urge the

Prime Minister to act boldly on all of them.

The process of acknowledging past wrongs strengthens a democratic society and fosters

cooperation among nations. Since the equal rights and dignity of women lie at the core of

the “comfort women” issue, its resolution would be a historic step toward the equality of

women and men in Japan, East Asia and the world.

In our classrooms, students from Japan, Korea, China and elsewhere discuss these

difficult issues with mutual respect and probity. Their generation will live with the record

of the past that we bequeath them. To help them build a world free of sexual violence and

human trafficking, and to promote peace and friendship in Asia, we must leave as full

and unbiased an accounting of past wrongs as possible.

SIGNED,

l Daniel Aldrich, Professor of Political Science, Purdue University.

l Jeffrey Alexander, Associate Professor of History, University of Wisconsin-Parkside.

l Anne Allison, Professor of Cultural Anthropology, Duke University.

l Marnie Anderson, Associate Professor of History, Smith College.

l E. Taylor Atkins, Presidential Teaching Professor of History, Northern Illinois

University.

l Paul D. Barclay, Associate Professor of History and Asian Studies Program Chair,

Lafayette College.

l Jan Bardsley, Associate Professor of Asian Studies, University of North Carolina,

Chapel Hill.

l James R. Bartholomew, Professor, Department of History, The Ohio State

University.

l Brett de Bary, Professor, Asian Studies and Comparative Literature, Cornell

University.

l Michael Baskett, Associate Professor and Chair, Department of Film and Media

Studies, University of Kansas

l Alan Baumler, Professor of History, Indiana University of Pennsylvania.

l Alexander R. Bay, Associate Professor, History Department, Chapman University.

l Theodore C. Bestor, Professor of Social Anthropology, Harvard University.

l Victoria Bestor, Director of the North American Coordinating Council on Japanese

Library Resources.

l Davinder Bhowmik, Associate Professor of Asian Languages and Literature,

University of Washington.

l Herbert Bix, Professor Emeritus of History and Sociology, Binghamton University.

l Daniel Botsman, Professor of History, Yale University.

l Michael Bourdaghs, Professor of Japanese Literature, East Asian Languages and

Civilizations, University of Chicago.

l Thomas Burkman, Research Professor of Asian Studies Emeritus, SUNY Buffalo.

l Susan L. Burns, Associate Professor of History, East Asian Languages and

Civilizations, University of Chicago.

l Eric Cazdyn, Distinguished Professor of Aesthetics and Politics, Department of East

Asian Studies & Centre for Comparative Literature, University of Toronto.

l Parks M. Coble, Professor of History, University of Nebraska, Lincoln.

l Haruko Taya Cook, Instructor of Languages and Cultures, William Paterson

University.

l Theodore F. Cook, Professor of History, William Paterson University.

l Bruce Cumings, Professor of History, University of Chicago.

l Katarzyna Cwiertka, Professor of Modern Japanese Studies, Universiteit Leiden.

l Charo D'Etcheverry, Associate Professor of Japanese Literature, University of

Wisconsin-Madison

l Eric Dinmore, Associate Professor of History, Hampden-Sydney College.

l Lucia Dolce, Chair, Centre for the Study of Japanese Religions, University of

London, SOAS.

l Ronald P. Dore, Honorary Fellow, London School of Economics.

l John W. Dower, Professor Emeritus of History, Massachusetts Institute of

Technology.

l Mark Driscoll, Professor of East Asian Studies, UNC, Chapel Hill.

l Prasenjit Duara, Raffles Professor of Humanities, National University of Singapore.

l Alexis Dudden, Professor of History, University of Connecticut.

l Martin Dusinberre, Professor of Global History, University of Zürich.

l Peter Duus, Professor of History (Emeritus), Stanford University.

l Steve Ericson, Associate Professor of History, Dartmouth College.

l Elyssa Faison, Associate Professor, University of Oklahoma.

l Norma Field, Professor Emerita of East Asian Studies, University of Chicago.

l W. Miles Fletcher, Professor of History, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

l Petrice R. Flowers, Associate Professor Political Science, University of Hawaii.

l Joshua A. Fogel, Professor of History, York University, Toronto.

l Sarah Frederick, Associate Professor of Japanese and Comparative Literature,

Boston University.

l Dennis J. Frost, Wen Chao Chen Associate Professor of East Asian Studies,

Kalamazoo College.

l Sabine Fruhstuck, Professor of Modern Japanese Cultural Studies, University of

California, Santa Barbara.

l James Fujii, Associate Professor, East Asian Languages and Literatures, University

of California, Irvine.

l Takashi Fujitani, Professor of History, University of Toronto.

l Sheldon M. Garon, Professor of History and East Asian Studies, Princeton

University.

l Timothy S. George, Professor of History, University of Rhode Island.

l Christopher Gerteis, Chair, Japan Research Centre, SOAS, University of London.

l Carol Gluck, Professor of History, Columbia University.

l Andrew Gordon, Professor of History, Harvard University.

l Helen Hardacre, Professor of Religions and Society, Harvard University.

l Harry Harootunian, Emeritus Professor of History, New York University; Adjunct

Professor of Japanese History, Columbia University.

l Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, Professor of History, University of California at Santa Barbara.

l Akiko Hashimoto, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Pittsburgh.

l Sally A. Hastings, Associate Professor of History, Purdue University.

l Tom Havens, Professor of History, Northeastern University.

l Kenji Hayao, Associate Professor, Political Science Department, Boston College.

l Laura Hein, Professor of History, Northwestern University.

l Robert Hellyer, Associate Professor of History, Wake Forest College.

l Manfred Henningsen, Professor of Political Science, University of Hawaii at Manoa.

l Christopher L. Hill, Assistant Professor of Japanese Literature, University of

Michigan.

l Katsuya Hirano, Associate Professor of History, UCLA.

l David L. Howell, Professor of Japanese History, Harvard University.

l Douglas Howland, Professor of History, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

l James L. Huffman, H. Orth Hirt Professor of History Emeritus, Wittenberg

University.

l Janet Hunter, Saji Professor of Economic History, London School of Economics and

Political Science.

l Akira Iriye, Professor Emeritus, Harvard University.

l Rebecca Jennison, Professor, Department of Humanities, Kyoto Seika University.

l William Johnston, Professor of History, Wesleyan University.

l John Junkerman, Documentary Filmmaker.

l Ikumi Kaminishi, Associate Professor of Art and Art History, Tufts University.

l Ken Kawashima, Associate Professor of East Asian Studies, University of Toronto.

l William W. Kelly, Professor of Anthropology, Yale University.

l James Ketelaar, Professor of History, University of Chicago.

l R. Keller Kimbrough, Associate Professor, University of Colorado at Boulder.

l Miriam Kingsberg, Assistant Professor of History, University of Colorado.

l Jeff Kingston, Director of Asian Studies and Professor of History, Temple

University Japan.

l Victor Koschmann, Professor of History, Cornell University.

l Emi Koyama, Independent Scholar, Japan-U.S. Feminist Network for

Decolonization (FeND).

l Ellis S. Krauss, Professor Emeritus, University of California, San Diego.

l Josef Kreiner, Professor Emeritus, Rheinische Freidrich-Wilhelms Universität Bonn.

l Shigehisa Kuriyama, Reischauer Institute Professor of Cultural History, Harvard

University.

l Peter Kuznick, Professor of History and Director, Nuclear Studies Institute,

American University.

l Thomas Lamarre, James McGill Professor, East Asian Studies , Art History and

Communications Studies, McGill University

l Andrew Levidis, Fellow, Reischauer Institute, Harvard University.

l Ilse Lenz, Professor Emeritus of Sociology, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany.

l Mark Lincicome, Associate Professor, Department of History, College of the Holy

Cross.

l Sepp Linhart, Professor Emeritus of Japanese Studies and Sociology, University of

Vienna.

l Yukio Lippit, Professor of History of Art and Architecture, Harvard University.

l Angus Lockyer, Lecturer in the History of Japan, Department of History, SOAS,

University of London.

l Susan Orpett Long, Professor of Anthropology, John Carroll University.

l David B. Lurie, Associate Professor of Japanese History and Literature, Columbia

University.

l Vera Mackie, Professor of Asian Studies, University of Wollongong.

l Wolfram Manzenreiter, Professor of Japanese Studies, University of Vienna.

l William Marotti, Associate Professor of History, UCLA.

l Y. Tak Matsusaka, Professor of History, Wellesley College.

l Trent Maxey, Associate Professor of Asian Languages and Civilizations and History,

Amherst College.

l James L. McClain Professor of History, Brown University.

l Gavan McCormack, Professor Emeritus of History, Australian National University.

l Melissa McCormick, Professor, Harvard University.

l David McNeill, Journalist and Professor, Sophia University.

l Mark Metzler, Professor of History, University of Texas at Austin.

l Ian J. Miller, Professor of History, Harvard University.

l Laura Miller, Ei’ichi Shibusawa-Seigo Arai Endowed Professor of Japanese Studies,

University of Missouri-St. Louis.

l Janis Mimura, Associate Professor, State University of New York, Stony Brook.

l Richard H. Minear, Professor of History (Emeritus), University of Massachusetts

Amherst.

l Yuki Miyamoto, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, DePaul University.

l Barbara Molony, Professor of History, Santa Clara University.

l Yumi Moon, Associate Professor of History, Stanford.

l Aaron Moore, Lecturer in East Asian History, The University of Manchester.

l Tessa Morris-Suzuki, Professor of Japanese History, Australian National University.

l Aurelia George Mulgan, Professor of Japanese Politics, University of New South

Wales.

l R. Taggart Murphy, Professor, International Political Economy, University of

Tsukuba, Tokyo Campus.

l Tetsuo Najita, Professor Emeritus of History, University of Chicago.

l Miri Nakamura, Associate Professor of Japanese Literature, College of East Asian

Studies, Wesleyan University.

l John Nathan, Takashima Professor of Japanese Cultural Studies, University of

California, Santa Barbara.

l Christopher Nelson, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, University

of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

l Satoko Oka Norimatsu, Editor, Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus.

l Markus Nornes, Professor of Asian Cinema, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

l David Tobaru Obermiller, Associate Professor, Department of History & Japanese

Studies Program, Gustavus Adolphus College.

l Eiko Otake, Visiting artist, Wesleyan University.

l Simon Partner, Professor of History, Duke University.

l T.J. Pempel, Jack M. Forcey Professor of Political Science for Study of East Asian

Politics, University of California, Berkeley.

l Matthew Penney, Associate Professor, Concordia University.

l Samuel E. Perry, Associate Professor of East Asian Studies, Brown University.

l Catherine Phipps, Associate Professor, University of Memphis

l Leslie Pincus, Associate Professor of History, University of Michigan.

l Morgan Pitelka, Associate Professor and Director of the Carolina Asia Center,

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

l Janet Poole, Associate Professor of East Asian Studies, University of Toronto.

l Roger Pulvers, Author and Translator, Sydney, Australia.

l Steve Rabson, Professor Emeritus of East Asian Studies, Brown University.

l Fabio Rambelli, Chair, Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies

and Professor of Japanese Religions and Cultural History, University of California,

Santa Barbara.

l Mark Ravina, Professor of History, Emory University.

l Steffi Richter, Professor of East Asian Studies, Universität Leipzig.

l Luke Roberts, Professor of History, University of California Santa Barbara.

l Jennifer Robertson, Professor of Anthropology and History of Art, University of

Michigan.

l Jay Rubin, Professor Emeritus, Harvard University.

l Ken Ruoff, Professor of History and Director of the Center for Japanese Studies,

Portland State University.

l Jordan Sand, Professor of History, Georgetown University.

l Wesley Sasaki-Uemura, Associate Professor of Japanese History, University of Utah.

l Ellen Schattschneider, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Women’s, Gender

and Sexuality Studies, Brandeis University.

l Andre Schmid, Associate Professor of East Asian Studies, University of Toronto.

l Amanda C. Seaman, Associate Professor of Japanese and Director of Comparative

Literature, University of Massachusetts Amherst.

l Ethan Segal, Associate Professor of History, Michigan State University.

l Wolfgang Seifert, Professor Emeritus of Japanese Studies, University of Heidelberg.

l Mark Selden, Senior Research Associate, Cornell University; Editor, Asia-Pacific

Journal: Japan Focus.

l Franziska Seraphim, Associate Professor of History, Boston College.

l Sayuri Guthrie Shimizu, Professor of History, Rice University.

l Eiko Maruko Siniawer, Associate Professor of History, Williams College.

l Patricia Sippel, Professor, Toyo Eiwa University.

l Richard Smethurst, Professor Emeritus of History, University of Pittsburgh.

l Kerry Smith, Associate Professor of History, Brown University.

l Daniel Sneider, Associate Director for Research, Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research

Center, Stanford University.

l M. William Steele, Professor of History, International Christian University.

l Brigitte Steger, Senior Lecturer in Modern Japanese Studies, University of

Cambridge.

l Stefan Tanaka, Professor of Communication, University of California, San Diego.

l Alan Tansman, Professor of Japanese Literature, University of California Berkeley.

l Sarah Thal, Associate Professor of History, University of Wisconsin-Madison.

l Michael F. Thies, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, UCLA

l Mark Tilton, Associate Professor of Political Science, Purdue University.

l Julia Adeney Thomas, Associate Professor of History, University of Notre Dame.

l John Whittier Treat, Emeritus Professor, Yale University; Professor, Ewha Womans

University.

l Hitomi Tonomura, Professor of History, University of Michigan

l Jun Uchida, Associate Professor of History, Stanford University.

l J. Keith Vincent, Associate Professor of Japanese and Comparative Literature,

Boston University.

l Stephen Vlastos, Professor of History, University of Iowa.

l Ezra F. Vogel, Professor Emeritus, Harvard University.

l Klaus Vollmer, Professor of Japanese Studies, LMU Munich University.

l Anne Walthall, Professor Emerita of History, University of California, Irvine.

l Max Ward, Assistant Professor of History, Middlebury College.

l Lori Watt, Associate Professor of History, Washington University in St. Louis.

l Gennifer Weisenfeld, Professor, Duke University.

l Michael Wert, Associate Professor, Marquette University.

l Kären Wigen, Professor of History, Stanford University.

l Tomomi Yamaguchi, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Montana State

University.

l Samuel H. Yamashita, Henry E. Sheffield Professor of History, Pomona College.

l Daqing Yang, Associate Professor, George Washington University.

l Christine Yano, Professor of Anthropology, University of Hawaii at Manoa.

l Marcia Yonemoto, Associate Professor of History, University of Colorado Boulder.

l Lisa Yoneyama, Professor of East Asian Studies, University of Toronto.

l Theodore Jun Yoo, Associate Professor of History, University of Hawaii.

l Takashi Yoshida, Professor, Western Michigan University.

l Louise Young, Professor of History, University of Wisconsin-Madison.

l Eve Zimmerman, Barbara Morris Caspersen Associate Professor of Humanities &

Associate Professor of Japanese, Wellesley University.

l Reinhard Zöllner, Professor of Japanese and Korean Studies, University of Bonn.

--

This statement emerged from an open forum held at the Association for Asian Studies

annual meeting held in Chicago during March 2015, and from subsequent discussions on

line among a wide range of Japan scholars. It represents the opinions only of those who

have signed it and not of any organization or institution.

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